In preparation for a new series of landscape/seascape paintings, I've been on the hunt for interesting and contemporary art pieces about water. While I've been finding some inspiration via VSCO & Instagram, I've also been looking back through the work of some of my favorite all-time conceptual artists who have worked with water or represented water. I thought I'd share these cool, collected, and refreshing pieces of water art.

In Heritage, Cai Guo-Qiang installs 99 animal replicas of different species, to create an idyllic drinking hole. It's as though he's transposing 3 disparate spaces onto one another. The animals' muddy water and grassland is exchanged for the crystal blue pool and white sand of a human paradise, and then it's all encompassed within a bizarre industrial gallery space with laboratory-like lighting.

This piece is from Ed Ruscha's 1978 documentary-style artist book Nine Swimming Pools. The book features the photographs of the nine Southern Californian pools, each one a pleasant yet sterile combination of gray cement & blue water.

Similar to the Ruscha piece, this photo is from a book of photography, A Hole in the Sun, by Viggo Mortensen. The scratched, hazy, ethereal medium format photographs all documenting one summer when the Mortensen family had their backyard swimming pool drained.

Of course I had to include Damien Hirst's The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living. Hirst obscures the reality of a dead shark in a formaldehyde bath by tinting the formaldehyde a calming blue, suspending the shark as though it was simply swimming, and encasing it in a pristine white and glass case.

I first saw a Leandro Erlich swimming pool at PS1 in New York. By using floating a thin layer of water on top of a piece of plexiglass Erlich, creates an awesome interactive installation can be viewed from above and below. When you view it from above you see fully clothed gallery-goers looking back up at you from the bottom of the pool. From below, you have the prime opportunity to take faux-underwater snapshots (like the photo above).

Oh, David Hockney. Here he turns a lovely Los Angeles pool into something melancholic with his muted blues. In this piece specifically, I love how the human(s) have just exited the scene creating a sort of afterimage, not only via the rising splash of water, but through the abandoned chair, and flesh-colored pavement.

Kristen Martincic is an amazing printmaker using traditional methods to create these spare graphic, modern, geometric pools, but aside from her pristine technique, her monochromatic color schemes are absolutely dreamy.